Record-high magnetic fields in the lab, almost a Gigagauss in magnitude,
have been achieved by aiming intense laser light at a dense plasma,
expanding the possibilities for laboratory re-creations of astrophysical
events.
At last week's
APS Division of Plasma Physics Meeting in Orlando, researchers from
Imperial College, London, and the Rutherford Appleton Lab in the UK
announced evidence of super-strong magnetic fields that are hundreds
of times more intense than any previous magnetic field created in an
Earth laboratory and up to a billion times stronger than our planet's
natural magnetic field. Such intense magnetic fields may soon enable
researchers to recreate extreme astrophysical conditions, such as the
atmospheres of neutron stars and white dwarfs, in their very own laboratories.
At the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory near Oxford in the UK, researchers
at the VULCAN facility aimed intense laser pulses, lasting only picoseconds
(trillionths of a second), at a dense plasma. The resulting magnetic
fields in the plasma were on the order of 400 Megagauss.
To determine the magnitude of the fields, the researchers made polarization
measurements of high-frequency light emitted during the experiment.
Recent measurements presented at the APS/DPP conference suggested that
the peak magnetic field in the densest region of the plasma approaches
1 Gigagauss.
Due to technological advances peak laser intensities are likely to
increase still further and consequently even higher magnetic fields
may soon be possible, making it possible to put models of extreme astrophysical
conditions to the test. (Poster
CP1.125, November 11, contact Karl Krushelnick, Imperial College,
University of London, 011-44-20-7594-7635, kmkr@ic.ac.uk; for background
see Tatarakis et al., Nature,
17 January 2002)